Bubble Tea: So Many Flavors, so Little Time

Each country I’ve lived in has some food or drink item I came to crave. So, when I think of that food or drink I think of that country. Like how eating Creamsicles and pork rinds reminds me of my childhood. (Okay, I have some southern roots and I can not recall the last time either passed my lips.) Bubble tea reminds me of Taiwan. When I left there I was sure that was the end of my bubble tea drinking days, since I hadn’t seen it before I moved to Hsinchu. As it turns out, bubble tea made it out of Asia and it seems it’s the latest creation to rival Baskin and Robbins ice-cream in the number of flavors possible. In Columbus, Ohio there are at least three places I know if that serve bubble tea-two of the businesses revolve around it. One, Bubbles Tea & Juice Company, is at the North Market, a swank boutique like eatery that stalls with various offerings ranging from organic meats to high end baked goods to ethnic foods and the other is near The Ohio State University campus.

The bubbles in bubble tea aren’t really bubbles at all but tapioca balls that are so sticky if you shoot them out of a straw at a window, they’ll stick. I have never done this but I know someone else who has. The balls are black and settle to the bottom of the glass, which in true Taiwan fashion is usually not glass but plastic. The tea is served either with milk or without and comes in different flavors: red bean, litchi, green tea melon, strawberry, you name it, someone is making it somewhere. In Taiwan you can get it cold or hot. I prefer hot myself. In the U.S., cold seems to be the temperature of choice.

Here are links to blogs and articles about Bubble Tea spots in Seattle, Washington, D.C., and Houston. Read them for flavor suggestions. Where do you go for your bubble tea and which flavor do you recommend? Here’s a link to a company, Boba.us where you can buy supplies to make your own.

The World’s First Ever Wendy’s Restaurant is Closing

The original Wendy’s Restaurant at 257 E. Broad St., the first ever, is shutting its doors next Friday. Rats! This is a place I take people when they are visiting and we’re venue hopping in the downtown Columbus area. It’s sort of near the Statehouse, Columbus Museum of Art, COSI (the science museum), and the Franklin Park Conservatory, making it a great last minute stop idea. An “I’m hungry. Let’s eat” kind of place. Plus, it’s cool to say, “This was the first Wendy’s.”

Dave Thomas, Wendy’s founder opened this first one in 1969. Inside is a Wendy’s museum of sorts. Toys given in kid’s meals, the uniform made by his wife and worn by his daughter for the restaurant’s logo, an employees’ how-to manual, and loads of photographs, awards and news clippings of Wendy’s news over the years are some of the items on display as a nostalgia bonanza to fast food. Historic or not, this particular Wendy’s loses money and lots of it. The parking is lousy and there isn’t a drive through which is partly to blame. Plus, not many people live downtown so the hours are limited. City Wendy can’t keep up with suburbs Wendy.

About the neat memorabilia. All will be moved to the Wendy’s headquarters in Dublin, Ohio. Ironically, Dublin, although it has a small town center, is a suburb of sorts of Columbus. I’m going to miss this downtown marker. Seriously, there will be no where to eat on the fly in Columbus’s downtown area on the weekends after this Friday.

Here’s an article from RoadsideAmerica.com about the first Wendy’s. There are some photos as well.